Volume 16 Article 9 2017 A Divided Front: Military Dissent During the Vietnam War Kaylyn L. Sawyer Gettysburg College Class of 2017 Follow this and additional works at: https://cupola.gettysburg.edu/ghj Part of the Military History Commons, Political History Commons, Social History Commons, and the United States History Commons Share feedback about the accessibility of this item. Sawyer, Kaylyn L. (2017) "A Divided Front: Military Dissent During the Vietnam War," The Gettysburg Historical Journal: Vol. 16 , Article 9. Available at: https://cupola.gettysburg.edu/ghj/vol16/iss1/9 This open access article is brought to you by The uC pola: Scholarship at Gettysburg College. It has been accepted for inclusion by an authorized administrator of The uC pola. For more information, please contact [email protected]. A Divided Front: Military Dissent During the Vietnam War Abstract Emerging from a triumphant victory in World War Two, American patriotism surged in the 1950s. Positive images in theater and literature of America’s potential to bring peace and prosperity to a grateful Asia fueled the notion that the United States could be the “good Samaritan of the entire world.”[1] This idea prevailed through the mid-1960s as three-quarters of Americans indicated they trusted their government. That positive feeling would not last, and America’s belief in its own exceptionalism would begin to shatter with “the major military escalation in Vietnam and the shocking revelations it brought.”[2] The turmoil in social and economic spheres during the 1960s combined with contradictions about America’s role in Vietnam and realization of the government’s deception regarding the nature and progress of the war itself fueled the largest movement of servicemen and veteran dissent in this nation’s history. [1] Christian G. Appy, American Reckoning (New York: The eP nguin Group, 2015) 13. [2] Appy, American Reckoning, xv. Keywords Vietnam, Vietnam War, Military history, Civil Rights, Military integration This article is available in The Gettysburg Historical Journal: https://cupola.gettysburg.edu/ghj/vol16/iss1/9 A Divided Front: Military Dissent during the Vietnam War By Kaylyn Sawyer ~ ♦ ~ Emerging from a triumphant victory in World War II. American patriotism surged in the 1950s. Positive images in theater and literature of America’s potential to bring peace and prosperity to a grateful Asia fueled the notion that the United States could be the “good Samaritan of the entire world.”1 This idea prevailed through the mid-1960s as three-quarters of Americans indicated they trusted their government. That positive feeling would not last, and America’s belief in its own exceptionalism would begin to shatter with “the major military escalation in Vietnam and the shocking revelations it brought.”2 The turmoil in social and economic spheres during the 1960s combined with contradictions about America’s role in Vietnam and realization of the government’s deception regarding the nature and progress of the war itself fueled the largest movement of servicemen and veteran dissent in this nation’s history. The year 1965 would be pivotal in turning public opinion against the war as three significant events coincided to raise public consciousness. First, Ramparts magazine, founded in 1962 as a liberal Catholic quarterly, published its first article on the war in Vietnam in January of 1965 highlighting the contradictions 1 Christian G. Appy, American Reckoning (New York: The Penguin Group, 2015) 13. 2 Appy, American Reckoning, xv. ~ 139 ~ between what America had been told about Vietnam and what was actually occurring there politically.3 Second, President Johnson announced in July, that he would increase the number of troops sent to Vietnam by 50,000. This would necessitate a doubling of draft calls, seemingly in contradiction to the administration’s stated goal of peace.4 Finally, America was exposed to its first shocking images of the war’s reality through television. CBS correspondent Morley Safer, while accompanying US Marines on a search and destroy mission, produced what is considered to be one of the most controversial reports of the war. With images of US soldiers torching civilian houses as a backdrop, Safer simply stated, “This is what the war in Vietnam is all about.”5 For the first time, Americans saw that their troops were capable of committing atrocities. These events galvanized civilian activists and sparked the beginning of a dissent movement within the armed services. GI resistance to the Vietnam War began in 1965 similar to a ripple; it started with “individual acts of conscience,” but then spread into collective acts of organized dissent within the ranks.6 The earliest known example of GI protest occurred on November 6, 1965 in El Paso, Texas. Lieutenant Henry Howe joined a small civilian peace demonstration, carrying a sign that stated, “End Johnson’s Facist [sic] Aggression.”7 Although Howe was not in uniform, not on duty, and in apparent compliance with military 3 Robert Scheer, “Hang Down Your Head, Tom Dooley,” Ramparts, January 1965. 4 Pomfret, John D. “Johnson Orders 50,000 More Men to Vietnam and Doubles Draft; Again Urges U.N. to Seek Peace.” New York Times. July 29, 1965. 5 Morley Safer’s Cam Ne News Broadcast. Accessed February 29, 2016. See https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hNYZZi25Ttg. 6 Richard Moser, The New Winter Soldiers (New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 1996) 69. 7 David Cortright, Soldiers in Revolt: GI Resistance During the Vietnam War (Chicago: Haymarket Books, 1975) 52. ~ 140 ~ regulations, he was court-martialed and sentenced to two years hard labor. In February of 1966, former Green Beret Donald Duncan became the first Vietnam Veteran to publicly speak out against the war. In his Ramparts magazine article entitled, “The whole thing was a lie!” Duncan praised antiwar protestors, arguing they were “opposed to people, our own and others, dying for a lie, thereby corrupting the very word democracy.”8 In October 1966, Army doctor Howard Levy refused to train Green Beret medics headed to Vietnam. His court-martial defense was based on the Nuremberg principle requiring non-participation in war crimes or genocide. Despite a protracted and publicized trial process, Levy was convicted and sentenced to three years at Fort Leavenworth.9 Before the summer of 1966, soldiers operated as individuals in their dissent to the war. However, on June 30, 1966, PFC James Johnson, PVT Dennis Mora, and PVT David Samas— later known as the Fort Hood Three—became the first soldiers to collectively oppose the war. They refused direct orders to board a ship bound for Vietnam and stated in a press conference, “We have decided to take a stand against this war, which we consider immoral, illegal, and unjust.”10 In an article published in The Peacemaker periodical, Private Samas is quoted as saying during his court-martial, “The Nuremberg trials established that soldiers have the obligation to use their consciences in following orders.”11 The GI resistance movement further grew to include issues of racial identity. Marines William Harvey and George Daniels— both African American—were the first Marines to openly question 8 Donald Duncan, “The Whole Thing Was a Lie!,” Ramparts 4, no 10, February 1966. 9 Cortright, Soldiers in Revolt: GI Resistance During the Vietnam War, 52. 10 Moser, The New Winter Soldiers, 69. 11 “Long Sentences for Three GI Refusers,” Peacemaker, September 17, 1966, Gettysburg College Special Collections, Box 14 Folder 1, 5. ~ 141 ~ whether African Americans should fight at all in Vietnam. The two men were arrested for asking to speak with their commanding officer, charged with “insubordination and promoting disloyalty,” and sentenced to prison.12 African Americans again rose up as a group on the night of August 23, 1968 in response to an executive decision to send troops to the Democratic Convention in Chicago. Over one hundred African American troops gathered at Fort Hood to “discuss their opposition to Army racism and the use of troops against civilians.”13 The forty-three African American GIs arrested became known as the Fort Hood Forty-Three. While civilian peace activists had organizations to promote their cause, it was not until April of 1967 that Vietnam veterans had an organization of their own. In the streets of Manhattan, over 100,000 protestors gathered for what would be the largest rally in New York since the war began. Vietnam veterans were asked to march at the front, and the six who did so conceived Vietnam Veterans Against the War (VVAW). One of the six veterans, Jan Barry recalled how the organization came to be during the march: Just as we got close…somebody said, “Vietnam veterans go to the front”…Somebody had provided a banner that said Vietnam Veterans Against the War…So I tracked down this Veterans for Peace group, went to one of their meetings, and discovered there was no Vietnam veterans group, they just brought along the sign, hoping some Vietnam veterans would show up.14 12 Cortright, Soldiers in Revolt: GI Resistance During the Vietnam War, 52. 13 Ibid., 56. 14 Moser, The New Winter Soldiers, 104. ~ 142 ~ Early statements of the VVAW claimed Vietnam was a civil war with no American solution, and that the American people were lied to about the nature of their country’s involvement.15 GI resistance was now represented by an official organization comprised of men who had fought in the conflict and witnessed first-hand the realities of the war. The GI movement continued to grow and gain momentum in 1968 as the war effort in Vietnam suffered. In April, forty GIs led an antiwar demonstration in San Francisco, marking the first time active-duty soldiers were at the head of a protest march.16 Outside Fort Hood in Texas, soldiers gathered for a “love-in” to listen to rock music and antiwar speeches.
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